Just because I couldn’t go back to sleep didn’t mean I should disrupt the blessed zzzzzzs of my sweet, hormonally-balanced man.

I had already been awake for almost two hours. Thinking. Praying. Planning.

Perusing Facebook on my phone. Being quiet.

It was Sunday. We can sleep in on Sundays, I reminded myself. You should go back to sleep, I self-instructed.

Oh, well, I can make it a few more minutes until the alarm goes off, I thought. Then, I can get up, guilt-free, and put on a pot of coffee.

Oh, how I love the smell of a brewing pot of coffee. And the sound.

The gentle dripping sound of each darkly-brewed drop hitting its spot in the soon-to-be-filled glass carafe. That comforting swoosh of forced air at the end, when all the water in the reservoir is gone. The high-pitched beep, beep, beep, inviting the drinker to the waiting cup.

Do you remember the first time you inhaled the distinct aroma of a brewing pot of coffee?

I do.

Every morning of a whole spoiled-rotten week at my grandparents’ house in Elk City, I woke to the sound of coffee bubbling up through the electric percolator and the captivating smell of its earthiness, infusing the homey atmosphere in gentle, predictable puffs, like billowy little smoke signals, beckoning me to the kitchen with the methodical rhythm of a War Chief’s drum.

Groggy and content, I would kick off the crisp white sheet and thin summer blanket, pad my lanky self into the next room, and hear my Granddaddy say, from behind the biggest smile in the whole State of Oklahoma, “Good morning, Sugarfoot!”

If the Mayor had walked through the back door, I don’t believe he would have garnered any greater reception than I enjoyed from my beloved grandfather on those summer mornings at the breakfast table where he drank coffee and discussed the day with my grandmother before he left for work at Puckett’s Grocery Store.

And then, the glassy “clink” of cup on saucer.

Followed by the sizzle of bacon in skillet.

Uh-oh. I must have eased back to dreamland there for just a second.

Maybe my knee jerked a little.

Or perhaps my arm moved across the cool of the cotton sheets, making just enough of a rustle to wake my man.

“How long have you been awake?”

“Not that long.”

“I’m sorry I woke you up.”

“No, you should have done it sooner. Do you want to try to go back to sleep or do you want to get up and walk to that new place we saw down by the Capitol for a cup of coffee?”

“What new place?”

“You know – that new restaurant in the Aloft Hotel on Congress that we noticed when we were standing on the opposite corner watching the ROT Rally motorcycle parade. They have that nice outdoor seating.”

“Oh, yeah – that place!”

I jump up (kinda) out of the bed, grabbing shorts, shirt, ball cap, socks and tennis shoes.

You don’t have to ask ME twice to walk somewhere I’ve never been for a cup of coffee – in this city of my adventurous dreams.

Even without my face on.

“I’ll take the raspberry cream cheese croissant, please,” I told the sweet, young girl behind the plentiful pastry counter.

“And coffee. Black.”

Black? Did I just say black? Since when do I order my coffee black?

I mean, if I’m eating something decadent and sweet, I prefer a non-sweetened cup of coffee with it; however, I always ask for cream. Never just black.

Actually, I really can’t even think of a time before that Sunday when you would have heard me order black coffee.

Unless maybe I was on a detective mission and wanted to be very discreet and unnoticed.

“Eye. Private eye.”

“Coffee. Black coffee.”

Oh, well, for whatever reason, I was on a carefree Sunday morning outing with my hubby, and I was in the mood for simple and forthright, not swirled and frothy.

“Wow, that was fantastic,” I say to that sweet girl behind the counter as we make our way out the door. “Especially the coffee. I may have to start drinking my coffee black more often. It was surprisingly wonderful.”

“Oh, that’s coffee from Little City Roasters, right here in Austin.”

—————————-

A continent away and three hours ahead, on a coffee farm known as Fazenda Recreio, a young Brazilian man named Diogo Dias has grown the beans that I now taste in my coffee.

Growing coffee beans is not just Diogo’s life’s work – it’s his life.

How fascinating to think that when you and I lay awake in the early, early hours of a Sunday morning, this young farmer has already enjoyed his own pour over using ground beans grown on the family farm.

Day after day, those Brazilian beans make their way from plant to processor to pallet to package, in Austin – the city of Diogo’s commercial dreams.

—————–

Over on the east side of I-35, where ideas abound and creativity circulates like a panhandle whirlwind, there sits an inconspicuous metal building under an unassuming sign that reads: Casa Brasil.

Inside is a month’s supply of raw coffee beans, sealed in protective green plastic, encased in burlap bags, stacked like members of a uniformed choir, waiting for their chance at the stage.

This is not a big, fancy warehouse modeled after the precisioned supply chains of engineering classrooms.

It’s more like a nice, clean man-cave, where the man and his friends gather to talk shop and taste the daily brew.

Only there’s no TV on the wall.

But there’s a story.

And you can feel it.

When Casa Brasil’s owner, Joel Shuler lived in South America while playing the soccer circuit, he grew to love Brazilian coffee.

A few years later, after knee injuries ended his soccer career, Joel found himself in Austin pursuing what everyone comes to Austin to find.

Purpose.

After searching for a reminiscent cup of Brazilian joe, Joel (how appropriate is that?) struck out. A local roaster even told him there was no such thing.

What? No such thing as good Brazilian coffee?

Joel Shuler knew better.

So, in 2005, Casa Brasil was born.

But it wasn’t easy.

He had to learn the business, make relationships with the growers, rent space, hire employees, come up with a name, design a logo, buy a roaster, purchase the beans and refine the process.

Whew! Good thing Joel knew how to stay caffeinated!

Gorgeous photo from a growing partner. (Instagram @casabrasil)

In 2011, Shuler added another dimension to his importing business when he saved Austin’s iconic Little City Roasters brand from extinction and began to purchase microlots of single origin coffees from other countries, like Myanmar.

Not one to start out too big and be forced to backtrack down the mountain, Joel and his team have operated at a slow and deliberate pace.

Over the last 12 years, business has grown exponentially, but largely just by word of mouth.

Joel has allowed his employees the time and opportunity to learn the industry while wrapping their hearts around the farmers who grow these little known Brazilian coffee beans.

Here at Little City, they’re as clear in their intention as the purified water poured over the beans.

These guys are not at all interested in impersonal marketing.

Instead, it’s all about the connection between the bean and the beaker. The coffee and the carafe. The adventure and the seeker.

That kind of business plan appears to be working just fine for Little City.

Beans are roasted to order and delivered every day of the week to supply local coffee shops and restaurants all over Austin – the city of Joel Shuler’s entrepreneurial dreams.

——————–

Have you tried a cup of Brazilian coffee?

If you’re skeptical, I don’t blame you. For some unknown reason, if that sweet girl behind Caroline’s pastry counter had given me a geographical choice, I might not have chosen a Brazilian brew.

Even though I’m a coffee lover, I’m a little more middle-of-the-road in my favorites lineup, as uneducated as that may admittably be.

Where sleeping giants wake up with great ideas.

Encouraging intentional adventure and a smooooooth cup of Brazilian-grown coffee,

P.S. – One-pound bags of Little City Coffee Roasters’ whole beans are available for purchase online, or at a variety of other restaurants and coffee shops. For a brewed cup of brewed blend, stop in at Caroline or any Torchy’s Tacos location.

Hi, there! My name is Brenda McDearmon, and I love to encourage people! I created this blog to help overfiftyers look beyond the transitions into a future of everyday adventure so they can focus on themselves a little, and on every other good thing in life a lot. I'm so glad you're here!